A few weeks after I wrote a column about odd things found in books, I pulled a book from my shelf and out fell a "book token," a thin piece of pale yellow and blue cardboard. It is exchangeable (it said, in small print) at any book token bookshop in Great Britain or Ireland. Someone had inscribed it to Jean, with love from the Boys, and dated it: Christmas 1946.
It is so easy to slip something into a book and forget it's there — when I got my first COVID-19 shot I stuck my vaccination card into the book I was carrying, and when it was time for the second shot I had to rack my brain to remember which book it was.
All of which brings me to you, and your wonderful, hilarious, touching and occasionally disturbing recollections of oddball things you have found in books. Read on; your stories are far better than book tokens and vaccine paperwork. And huge thanks to the more than 100 readers across the country who took the time to write.
Mary Feeney, Prior Lake: The best thing I found in a used book was a long out of date employee reward certificate from Northwest Airlines. Someone never took advantage of that free fountain drink.
Gladys Walcker, Hopkins: In the 1980s my husband and I enjoyed going to garage and estate sales. A few days after one of our outings, he was going through his latest book purchase and found a ring pressed deep into the pages. He took it to a jeweler and learned it was a diamond ring valued at about $400. With no recollection of where the book was purchased, he decided to have it made into a necklace for me and I've enjoyed wearing it for many years.
Cathryn Kasic, St. Louis Park: My dad used to tuck love notes into my mom's books. So when Dad died and we had to clean the house before Mom moved to assisted living, we flipped through all the books and gave the notes to Mom. Sweet love.
Tersenia Schuett, St. Paul: I am a member of the Book Ends, the American Association of University Women fundraising group that solicits used books in order to raise money for scholarships. Four of us sit around a table almost every Wednesday morning, sorting books. My favorite find, which is now framed and hangs on the wall at our cabin: a 1972 flier advertising an Arlo Guthrie concert to benefit George McGovern's campaign for president.
Tom and Lisa Tangen, Vancouver, Wash.: Early last year we purchased five pallets of old books at an auction. The most interesting bookmark in the collection was an inventory list of laundry items from West Point in the year 1911. Some plebe had marked what items he was turning in to be cleaned.